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Jan 13, 2023
01/23
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wilson. unlike the physical monuments in the nation's capital, it is a living memorial whose work and scholarship commemorates, quote, the ideals and concerns of woodrow wilson. as both a distinguished scholar and national leader, president wilson felt strongly that the scholar and the policy maker were, quote, engaged in a common enterprise. today, the center takes seriously his views on the need to bridge the gap between the world of ideas and the world of policy. bringing them into creative contact, enriching the work of both and enabling each to learn from the other. this series, wilson then and now, is our effort to make wilson and his period more central to that creative contact between ideas and practice in national and global affairs. in a critical and inclusive way, we seek to highlight work on wilson and his time that offers explicit or implicit lessons for contemporary or enduring problems in public and international life. for this episode, we wanted to look beyond academic work in
wilson. unlike the physical monuments in the nation's capital, it is a living memorial whose work and scholarship commemorates, quote, the ideals and concerns of woodrow wilson. as both a distinguished scholar and national leader, president wilson felt strongly that the scholar and the policy maker were, quote, engaged in a common enterprise. today, the center takes seriously his views on the need to bridge the gap between the world of ideas and the world of policy. bringing them into creative...
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Jan 14, 2023
01/23
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wilson house. it had changed names about 12 years ago to the president woodrow wilson house, and the wilson house as we call it among ourselves, the wilson house, was also originally described as a shrine to woodrow wilson. the house itself was built by a famous architect, washington, d.c. architect in 19 a 15, and the -- 1915, and the wilsons moved into that house in 1921 on inauguration day. many people do call it the house on f street. but when edith wilson -- wilson went on to live there for three years, he died in 1924 in this house, edith wilson went on to live in this house for another 37 years. so, in fact, having lived in the house for close to, you know, 40 years, she really did -- she put a stamp on what the house would be, and she bequeathed it to the national trust for historic preservation upon her death in 1961. and it was opened to the public in 1963 and became really an official, officially a historic house and i museum in 196 a 5. her letters of bequeathment refer to it as being a
wilson house. it had changed names about 12 years ago to the president woodrow wilson house, and the wilson house as we call it among ourselves, the wilson house, was also originally described as a shrine to woodrow wilson. the house itself was built by a famous architect, washington, d.c. architect in 19 a 15, and the -- 1915, and the wilsons moved into that house in 1921 on inauguration day. many people do call it the house on f street. but when edith wilson -- wilson went on to live there...
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Apr 7, 2023
04/23
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it is wilson. wrote a book on woodrow wilson for a series on the presidents i discovered a wilson. i didn't know very romantic very emotional very deep feeling i'm discovering. who edith really is i'm working with molly on her book and like first lady's memoirs. her memoirs fascinating and that third picture there on the right. i've been to the library of congress and i've read her papers, especially edith's papers when she was trying to put this memoir together, and i've learned a lot from all of this next please. i'll write my first point. you can't understand edith wilson if you don't understand woodrow wilson's attitude towards women. this is a very sensitive topic now if i say wilson women most people will say like that wonderful picture. i found these kaiser wilson he was against the constitutional amendment giving the women the right to vote at least for a long time. he was president. this makes you think that wilson is a kind of dour figure who hates women doesn't want them to succeed has has nothing to do with them or nothing too good to say about them. quite a discovered.
it is wilson. wrote a book on woodrow wilson for a series on the presidents i discovered a wilson. i didn't know very romantic very emotional very deep feeling i'm discovering. who edith really is i'm working with molly on her book and like first lady's memoirs. her memoirs fascinating and that third picture there on the right. i've been to the library of congress and i've read her papers, especially edith's papers when she was trying to put this memoir together, and i've learned a lot from all...
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Sep 4, 2023
09/23
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wilson had a law degree. so did lodge. wilson had written histories so had lodge. someone more extroverted than wilson would have tried to build on the common ground i think but not wilson. and he might have shied away because lodge had one edge over him that there was no way he could like get a leg up on him. wilson had taught government at princeton and elsewhere and he'd written about it but before his election as president he'd served in elective office for only two years as governor of new jersey. lodge had been in the senate for 20 years when wilson turned up in washington. so wilson did nothing to cultivate lodge. wilson in that regard was the polar opposite of lbj and bill clinton who were famous for walking into georgetown parties and going straight for somebody sometimes a politicians sometimes of journalists. who disagreed with them? both lbj and clinton wanted to win that person over. wilson was not that sort of fellow. he was guarded. had no idea how to schmooze. his first biographer who knew him well notice that he never took the initiative in making
wilson had a law degree. so did lodge. wilson had written histories so had lodge. someone more extroverted than wilson would have tried to build on the common ground i think but not wilson. and he might have shied away because lodge had one edge over him that there was no way he could like get a leg up on him. wilson had taught government at princeton and elsewhere and he'd written about it but before his election as president he'd served in elective office for only two years as governor of new...
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Jan 24, 2023
01/23
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it is wilson. wrote a book on woodrow wilson for a series on the presidents i discovered a wilson. i didn't know very romantic very emotional very deep feeling i'm discovering. who edith really is i'm working with molly on her book and like first lady's memoirs. her memoirs fascinating and that third picture there on the right. i've been to the library of congress and i've read her papers, especially edith's papers when she was trying to put this memoir together, and i've learned a lot from all of this next please. i'll write my first point. you can't understand edith wilson if you don't understand woodrow wilson's attitude towards women. this is a very sensitive topic now if i say wilson women most people will say like that wonderful picture. i found these kaiser wilson he was against the constitutional amendment giving the women the right to vote at least for a long time. he was president. this makes you think that wilson is a kind of dour figure who hates women doesn't want them to succeed has has nothing to do with them or nothing too good to say about them. quite a discovered.
it is wilson. wrote a book on woodrow wilson for a series on the presidents i discovered a wilson. i didn't know very romantic very emotional very deep feeling i'm discovering. who edith really is i'm working with molly on her book and like first lady's memoirs. her memoirs fascinating and that third picture there on the right. i've been to the library of congress and i've read her papers, especially edith's papers when she was trying to put this memoir together, and i've learned a lot from all...
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Jan 12, 2023
01/23
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it had gone republican, i think wilson takes a chance and edith wilson supports it. if you are so strong, maybe you will break the opposition. i think the tide was turning against him. the progressive movement in american, and on the world stage. she stepped in and said she thought he could compromise. she came forward and said, i think he should. the more i study, the era that is coming and that continued battle between lodge and his philosophy, which will donate much of the twenties and wilson. i do not think it was totally his fault, i do not think it would have passed. that is my considered opinion after the study of many years. >> i totally agree with mary but to be fair the vice president wanted no part of it. thomas marshall was put on the ticket to get the electoral college votes of indiana. he was a bit of a clown, he was great with a one liner and super charming at parties. he wanted no part of the presidency and he certainly wanted no part of being seen as a usurper. before the 25th amendment, when it was so muddy about what happened with an incapacitated
it had gone republican, i think wilson takes a chance and edith wilson supports it. if you are so strong, maybe you will break the opposition. i think the tide was turning against him. the progressive movement in american, and on the world stage. she stepped in and said she thought he could compromise. she came forward and said, i think he should. the more i study, the era that is coming and that continued battle between lodge and his philosophy, which will donate much of the twenties and...
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Sep 5, 2023
09/23
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wilson had a law degree. so did lodge. wilson had written histories so had lodge. someone more extroverted than wilson would have tried to build on the common ground i think but not wilson. and he might have shied away because lodge had one edge over him that there was no way he could like get a leg up on him. wilson had taught government at princeton and elsewhere and he'd written about it but before his election as president he'd served in elective office for only two years as governor of new jersey. lodge had been in the senate for 20 years when wilson turned up in washington. so wilson did nothing to cultivate lodge. wilson in that regard was the polar opposite of lbj and bill clinton who were famous for walking into georgetown parties and going straight for somebody sometimes a politicians sometimes of journalists. who disagreed with them? both lbj and clinton wanted to win that person over. wilson was not that sort of fellow. he was guarded. had no idea how to schmooze. his first biographer who knew him well notice that he never took the initiative in making
wilson had a law degree. so did lodge. wilson had written histories so had lodge. someone more extroverted than wilson would have tried to build on the common ground i think but not wilson. and he might have shied away because lodge had one edge over him that there was no way he could like get a leg up on him. wilson had taught government at princeton and elsewhere and he'd written about it but before his election as president he'd served in elective office for only two years as governor of new...
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Jun 29, 2023
06/23
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i didn't write about wilson we have about three pages on james wilson in our eight volumes. you know. specifically on james wilson, but he is a very interesting person and he came from scotland. in 1765 and then very quickly got involved in revolutionary activities in the 70s. he was very well educated. he had gone to saint andrews and scotland. philosophy history political theory and all of that show throughout his career he was never trained specifically as a lawyer. but he became he read law i think was john dickinson. but i'm trying to remember i finished these volumes in 2006 and since then have been living in the 20th century. so it's hard to remember all of this. but i think he certainly had a political theory when he was a delegate to the constitutional convention and was very important in that convention and in the pennsylvania ratifying convention. where he easily convinced them that they should vote for the constitution and he very much wanted to be chief justice. there is no question. and george washington was a very shrewd administrator and understood character
i didn't write about wilson we have about three pages on james wilson in our eight volumes. you know. specifically on james wilson, but he is a very interesting person and he came from scotland. in 1765 and then very quickly got involved in revolutionary activities in the 70s. he was very well educated. he had gone to saint andrews and scotland. philosophy history political theory and all of that show throughout his career he was never trained specifically as a lawyer. but he became he read law...
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May 6, 2023
05/23
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wilson refused to do that. and so you have this set of preconditions, you know, leading up to the lusitania sinking. now, there was a wide range of of opinion on on the different sides of these different disputes, whether the united states should or should not forbid the exportation and sale of weapons of war. whether the federal government should or should not warn americans against traveling on these ships, that if they did so, they did it at their own risk. wilson took this series of positions that left him in a very unstable position in terms of policy. after the lusitania went down because theodore roosevelt called for war immediately and will soon. certainly didn't want that. but in the summer of 1915, because of the lusitania sinking, he decided that his earlier opposition to preparedness legislate and had been a mistake and he authorized the war in navy departments in the summer of 1915 to begin drafting preparedness measures and these were put into shape in the autumn of 1915. and then in january 1916,
wilson refused to do that. and so you have this set of preconditions, you know, leading up to the lusitania sinking. now, there was a wide range of of opinion on on the different sides of these different disputes, whether the united states should or should not forbid the exportation and sale of weapons of war. whether the federal government should or should not warn americans against traveling on these ships, that if they did so, they did it at their own risk. wilson took this series of...
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Sep 25, 2023
09/23
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so wilson and madison had a big debate. wilson's became a very distinguished us supreme court justice, and he died. alas, in death. it was a sad ending to a heroic career, but right now we're about to see the very first drt of the us constitution written by james wilson. okay, so now we are going to see the rarest draft of the us constitution in american history, the very first draft. many of us know the copy of the tution in the national archivesbuthat was the final copy. every important document has a first draft and . it was drafted on july 24, 1787. remember the constitutional convention begins begins on may 25th. i remember that because the address of the national constitution center is 525 arch street in philadelphia, 525 is may 25th and to months later was the first time that the committee created this draft of the constitution. so how did it end up here? well, it belongs to the historical society of pennsylvania. and james wilson died in 1789, the year that the bill of rights was proposed. he gave this document, alo
so wilson and madison had a big debate. wilson's became a very distinguished us supreme court justice, and he died. alas, in death. it was a sad ending to a heroic career, but right now we're about to see the very first drt of the us constitution written by james wilson. okay, so now we are going to see the rarest draft of the us constitution in american history, the very first draft. many of us know the copy of the tution in the national archivesbuthat was the final copy. every important...
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Jul 22, 2023
07/23
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woodrow wilson. the book is titled untold power the fascinating rise and complete sex legacy of first lady edith wilson. before we start, i want to let you know that we will save of time for some questions at the end, so please feel free to type those in the bottom. during the course of our discussion. and as i mentioned, we are happy to be co-hosting this women on wednesday with the first lady's initiative at agu and especially thrilled that the director of the first lady's initiative, our friend anita mcbride, is here tonight as well. anita, as i'm sure many of you know, is the former chief of staff for first lady laura bush and earlier in her career was the director of presidential personnel for ronald reagan and george h.w. bush. anita, let me have you set the stage a bit for our discussions tonight and just talk about what we can learn from the study of first ladies and their significant contributions to our history. thank you so much, betsy. i'm really thrilled to be here with you tonight and w
woodrow wilson. the book is titled untold power the fascinating rise and complete sex legacy of first lady edith wilson. before we start, i want to let you know that we will save of time for some questions at the end, so please feel free to type those in the bottom. during the course of our discussion. and as i mentioned, we are happy to be co-hosting this women on wednesday with the first lady's initiative at agu and especially thrilled that the director of the first lady's initiative, our...
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Jul 30, 2023
07/23
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so even woodrow wilson, maybe especially woodrow wilson in a speech to women's group talking about how things used to be and how they need to have the long lens of history. and so on. i mentioned that prior to the civil war we didn't have these kinds of problems because everybody was happy. and and that may have been true. if one overlooks a rather significant share of the population who were enslaved of the same time, take them all. look at what happened during the 19 tens, during the peak as it were, of the progressive movement. and it got and worse and worse until we get to the nadir and we have what everybody now agrees is, is the worst time in race relations in american. as i mentioned. and it's really important stress this point we've had racial riots, you know, throughout our own lifetimes of the unique thing about what was going on in the progressive era is that these race riots were almost exclusively white on black violence. you know, black people were were begging to have law enforcement in their neighborhoods and so on. and it was just a terrible thing to see what happened
so even woodrow wilson, maybe especially woodrow wilson in a speech to women's group talking about how things used to be and how they need to have the long lens of history. and so on. i mentioned that prior to the civil war we didn't have these kinds of problems because everybody was happy. and and that may have been true. if one overlooks a rather significant share of the population who were enslaved of the same time, take them all. look at what happened during the 19 tens, during the peak as...
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Apr 24, 2023
04/23
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woodrow wilson. throughout 1916, it didn't really look like she was going to evolve that office in any way. she was pretty good at campaigning and showed up where she needed to show up. it wasn't until 1917 when the u.s. joined world war i. being a wartime first lady is a whole other thing. it turned out that edith was very good at the public example part of the role. she quickly adopted all the stuff and have the card in the white house window that they were doing. she had sheep grazing to free up the landscapers to war work. she did all of that kind of collective responsibility, lead by example stuff, that we look to a first lady to do. once the war ended and woodrow wilson insisted on going to paris in person to be part of the peace treaty negotiation, she went with him. it was totally unprecedented. and they were gone for six months. in some ways, just kind of showing up, she elevated the office. there she was in paris, she was with him on every day, from page of every newspaper. she is staying a
woodrow wilson. throughout 1916, it didn't really look like she was going to evolve that office in any way. she was pretty good at campaigning and showed up where she needed to show up. it wasn't until 1917 when the u.s. joined world war i. being a wartime first lady is a whole other thing. it turned out that edith was very good at the public example part of the role. she quickly adopted all the stuff and have the card in the white house window that they were doing. she had sheep grazing to...
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kaitlin armstrong stood over mo wilson, put a third shot right into mo wilson's heart. >> byron: armstrong's defense team called the state's evidence inaccurate and unreliable, arguing detectives tried to pin the crime on kaitlan from the start. >> they had tunnel vision and jumped to conclusions with kaitlin armstrong, a woman who is trapped in a nightmare of circumstantial evidence. not one witness saw kaitlin armstrong allegedly commit this murder. not one. because there isn't one. >> the prosecution has so many arguments to throw out this defendant that it's going to be very hard for kaitlin to overcome them. >> byron: may 11th, 2022, mo wilson's friends discovered her body, shot twice in the head, once in the heart. the friends' frantic 911 call played for the jury in court. >> tell me exactly what happened. >> my friend is staying with me, and i just walked in and she's laying on the bathroom floor, and there's blood everywhere. um -- and i -- i don't know what happened. >> byron: prosecutors say the ballistics evidence matches the gun owned by armstrong. the next day, may 12th, office
kaitlin armstrong stood over mo wilson, put a third shot right into mo wilson's heart. >> byron: armstrong's defense team called the state's evidence inaccurate and unreliable, arguing detectives tried to pin the crime on kaitlan from the start. >> they had tunnel vision and jumped to conclusions with kaitlin armstrong, a woman who is trapped in a nightmare of circumstantial evidence. not one witness saw kaitlin armstrong allegedly commit this murder. not one. because there isn't...
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Oct 10, 2023
10/23
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so even woodrow wilson, maybe especially woodrow wilson in a speech to women's group talking about how things used to be and how they need to have the long lens of history. and so on. i mentioned that prior to the civil war we didn't have these kinds of problems because everybody was happy. and and that may have been true. if one overlooks a rather significant share of the population who were enslaved of the same time, take them all. look at what happened during the 19 tens, during the peak as it were, of the progressive movement. and it got and worse and worse until we get to the nadir and we have what everybody now agrees is, is the worst time in race relations in american. as i mentioned. and it's really important stress this point we've had racial riots, you know, throughout our own lifetimes of the unique thing about what was going on in the progressive era is that these race riots were almost exclusively white on black violence. you know, black people were were begging to have law enforcement in their neighborhoods and so on. and it was just a terrible thing to see what happened
so even woodrow wilson, maybe especially woodrow wilson in a speech to women's group talking about how things used to be and how they need to have the long lens of history. and so on. i mentioned that prior to the civil war we didn't have these kinds of problems because everybody was happy. and and that may have been true. if one overlooks a rather significant share of the population who were enslaved of the same time, take them all. look at what happened during the 19 tens, during the peak as...
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Jan 29, 2023
01/23
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michael wilson. >> michael is it. whatever he had to say, he had to tie everything together. >> and the team knew exactly where to find michael wilson. on death row. coming up. >> my name is michael wilson. >> i was incredibly nervous, because i knew what was on the line, for malcolm into marco. >> michael wilson,'s jaw-dropping admission. >> i was not trying to shoot karen summers. she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. >> and what he has to say about the police. >> all i know is, i had a murder weapon on, me and they let me go. >> when dateline continues. when dateline continues ♪ breeze driftin' on... ♪ [coughing] ♪ ...by, you know how i feel. ♪ if you're tired of staring down your copd,... ♪ it's a new dawn, ♪ ♪ it's a new day... ♪ ...stop settling. ♪ ...and i'm feelin' good. ♪ start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy makes breathing easier for a full 24 hours, improves l
michael wilson. >> michael is it. whatever he had to say, he had to tie everything together. >> and the team knew exactly where to find michael wilson. on death row. coming up. >> my name is michael wilson. >> i was incredibly nervous, because i knew what was on the line, for malcolm into marco. >> michael wilson,'s jaw-dropping admission. >> i was not trying to shoot karen summers. she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. >> and what he has to say...